Pasadena CA to draft breed discriminatory law

Pasadena officials have been discussing the possibility of a mandatory spay/neuter law for some time now. In October of this year officials said that they had tabled the discussion for six months.

Initially people were concerned that the proposal, which was breed neutral at the time, was an attempt to target the owners of dogs resembling pit bull terriers.

After supposedly postponing the conversation, officials jumped the gun on the time line given for the discussion and unveiled their intentions by voting at the end of November, 6-1, to draft a breed discriminatory spay/neuter law targeting pit bull terrier like dogs.

The proposal will require that those who own a targeted dog have them altered by the age of four months. This mirrors the recently passed Riverside County ordinance.

People who are opposed to breed discriminatory laws often let spay/neuter laws slide by without opposition because people altering their dogs is a good thing for many reasons. Some of the reasons cited by officials for wanting this law are to reduce over population, and aggression in dogs. These are good things for officials to want to achieve.

They would be good things for officials to want to achieve, if that really was their intent.

The real intention is very clear. They are not considering this because of population issues in shelters. They are not considering this to curb backyard breeders. They are drafting this law because they do not have the option to institute a ban. Since 2008 officials have been discussing banning pit bull terrier like dogs, but are unable to do so because California state law prohibits it. Councilman Steve Madison has said repeatedly that he would support an outright ban on pit bulls in Pasadena. In fact, we reported on this in 2012.

There is absolutely no ambiguity about the intent of this proposal when you see what they have to say first hand.

Please write or call the members of the council to respectfully and factually oppose this ordinance. When writing it is of the utmost importance to stay calm and focused. The facts are on the side of breed neutral laws and need no emotional embellishment. Jacque Robinson was the only opposing vote, so a note of thanks for her opposition would also be a very nice gesture. Additional district information can be found on the cities website.

I will need to look into that, but consider the source. They frequently do not update any listings that were the result of a repeal, or a state law that was enacted, and list many cities that do not have breed discriminatory ordinances as having them.

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